Stavros Ioannidis is Assistant Professor at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. He holds a PhD in philosophy from the University of Bristol (2012). He is the co-author (with Stathis Psillos) of Mechanisms in Science: Method or Metaphysics? (Cambridge University Press, 2022) and the principal investigator of the project MECHANISM, funded by the Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation. His research focuses on topics in the philosophy of biology (especially the concept of mechanism and mechanistic explanation, evolutionary and developmental biology) and in the metaphysics of science.
Gal Vishne is a graduate student for computational neuroscience in the international PhD program at the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences of the Hebrew University, working under the supervision of Prof. Leon Deouell and Prof. Ayelet Landau. She started her academic journey studying mathematics, but (to paraphrase David Chalmers) the mind was always occupying her thoughts where mathematics should have been, and she turned to neuroscience. Her research is aimed at distilling the neural underpinnings of conscious experience, trying to integrate mathematical and philosophical insights with cognitive and neuroscientific tools, to solve this age-old problem.
Meir Hemmo is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Haifa working mainly in philosophy of physics and philosophy of mind. He received his Ph.D. in philosophy of physics from the University of Cambridge in 1996. He co-authored (with Orly Shenker) the book The Road to Maxwell's Demon: Conceptual Foundations of Statistical Mechanics (Cambridge University Press, 2012), and published on the foundations and interpretation of quantum mechanics, classical and quantum statistical mechanics, the concept of probability in physics and reductive physicalism in physics, in the special sciences and in philosophy of mind.
Chapter 1. Introduction (Meir Hemmo, Stavros Ioannidis, Orly Shenker, Gal Vishne).- Chapter 2. Phenomenality and Accessibility of Conscious Experience (Katalin Balog).- Chapter 3. Levels of Reality and Levels of Description (Yemima Ben-Menahem).- Chapter 4. Levels of Reality and the Method of Metaphysics (Michael Esfeld).- Chapter 5. Can the Extended Current-Physics Reply Avoid Hempel's Dilemma? (Erez Firt).- Chapter 6. How Context Can Determine the Identity of Physical Computation (Nir Fresco).- Chapter 7. The Incremental Chain of Being (John Heil).- Chapter 8. How to Carve Nature at its Joints (Meir Hemmo & Orly Shenker).- Chapter 9. Fleeing from Flat Physicalism (Carl Hoefer).- Chapter 10. Is Mechanistic Investigation Reductive? (Arnon Levy).- Chapter 11. Levels in the Mentaculus (Barry Loewer).- Chapter 12. Structural Interpretation and Reductionism (Holger Lyre).- Chapter 13. Physicalism: Flat or Egalitarian? (Gualtiero Piccinini).- Chapter 14. Levels of Mechanism: Constitution vs Causation (Stathis Psillos & Stavros Ioannidis).- Chapter 15. Rethinking the Unity of Science Hypothesis: Levels, Mechanisms, and Realization (Lawrence Shapiro).- Chapter 16. Supervenience, Levels, and Probability (Elliott Sober).